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Dangermen: Who stands between the Socceroos and Asian Cup glory?

The Socceroos quest for AFC Asian Cup glory on home soil in January begins with a tricky group phase against Kuwait, Oman and Korea Republic. We take a look at the dangermen who could hurt the Aussies in our Asian Cup group.

Published

25 November 2014

KOREA REPUBLIC

Name: Heung-Min Son

Age: 22

Club: Bayer Leverkusen (Germany)

Position: Winger

A club-mate of Socceroo winger Robbie Kruse, Son possesses loads of pace and is equally devastating with both feet. It means he can play anywhere along the front line and has the ability to get in behind defences with his speed and clever runs. Son, who has also played for Hamburg in the Bundesliga, has scored 34 goals in 113 appearances in the German competition. His strike-rate at international level is also pretty good, scoring seven times for the senior national team in 32 caps.

A real x-factor in Paul Le Guen’s side, Al Muqbali (commonly known as Abdul Aziz Humaid Mubarak) should have the Socceroos defence on high-alert as Oman’s leading attacker. Al Muqbali scored against Australia in the 2-2 draw in Sydney in a World Cup qualifier in 2013 and has amassed 10 goals in 33 internationals. Not only good with his feet, Al Muqbali is also a threat in the air.

The most decorated of the Kuwaiti squad, Al-Mutawa is one of the survivors from Kuwait’s shock 1-0 win over the Socceroos in Canberra back in 2009. He is considered a legend at his club side Al Qadsia due to his phenomenal strike-rate in front of goal and was voted as Asia’s second-best player in 2006. Al-Mutawa, who wears jersey number 17 for both club and country, has scored 46 times from 141 internationals and will have to play a leading role if Jorvan Vieira’s side is to go far in January’s tournament.